Higher than reported adolescent and young adult clinical trial enrollment during the "Golden Age" of melanoma clinical trials
- PMID: 29478277
- PMCID: PMC5911596
- DOI: 10.1002/cam4.1307
Higher than reported adolescent and young adult clinical trial enrollment during the "Golden Age" of melanoma clinical trials
Abstract
Clinical trial enrollments in adolescents and young adults (AYA) with cancer have historically been lower than those in pediatric and older adult populations. We sought to examine therapeutic trial enrollment rates at our cancer center. We performed a retrospective evaluation of AYA patients treated before and after the first checkpoint inhibitor trial opened at our cancer center in 2007. We examined gender, stage at presentation and insurance status in terms of trial enrollment. We compared the trial participation rate of AYA patients with that of older adults. In this adult facility, 12.7% (1,831) of total patients were between age 15 and 39. Overall therapeutic clinical trial rate was 17.6% which increased to 19.8% since 2007. Both nodal disease or metastatic disease at presentation was associated with increasing odds of trial enrollment (OR = 5.36 and P < 0.001 for nodal disease and OR = 7.96 and P < 0.001 for metastatic disease). There was a nonstatistically significant trend toward improved 3-year overall survival in the AYA patients with advanced presentation that enrolled on clinical trials compared with those not enrolled on trials since 2007. AYA clinical trial enrollment at a comprehensive care center melanoma program was higher than reported in the literature overall for AYA patients. This 1,831 patient cohort may provide a foundation for more detailed investigation toward quantifying the effects of clinical trial enrollment in terms of age-specific benefits and toxicities for AYA patients with malignancies that have their peak incidence in older adults.
Keywords: AYA; BRAF; clinical trial; immunotherapy; melanoma.
© 2018 The Authors. Cancer Medicine published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.
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